06/04/2026
“The body is adapting to the life it believes it is living.”
One of the biggest clinical shifts in my thinking over the years has been realizing that many symptoms are not random dysfunctions.
They are organized adaptations.
The body is constantly responding to the conditions it believes it is living inside.
Posture changes.
Breathing changes.
Movement changes.
Digestion changes.
Inflammatory signaling changes.
Muscle recruitment changes.
Hormonal prioritization changes.
And eventually the adaptation becomes so familiar that both the patient and practitioner stop recognizing it as adaptation at all.
It simply becomes:
“This is just how I am.”
I see this constantly in clinical practice.
People performing therapeutic exercises while breath-holding.
Yoga practitioners repeatedly reinforcing instability patterns while believing they are “healing.”
Highly functional professionals operating from chronic sympathetic activation so consistently that urgency has become identity.
Then downstream symptoms emerge:
pain,
fatigue,
gut dysfunction,
sleep disruption,
burnout,
anxiety,
inflammatory conditions,
chronic tension patterns.
But many interventions are still being applied mechanically rather than contextually.
The protocol may technically be correct.
But the nervous system state receiving the intervention is often never assessed.
And that matters.
Because the body is not simply responding to the intervention itself.
It is responding to the internal conditions under which the intervention is occurring.
That realization fundamentally changed how I view rehabilitation, movement, stress physiology, and behavior change itself.
The body is not a machine to force into compliance.
It is an adaptive system constantly organizing around the environment it perceives.
And I think healthcare dramatically underestimates the importance of that distinction.
Link in bio to listen or click here ➜ https://youtu.be/_yg87Yoh0CI
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